Watch Me Move: The Animation Show June 6–September 1, 2014

NASHVILLE, Tenn. (April 7, 2014)—This summer the Frist Center for the Visual Arts comes alive with the installation of Watch Me Move: The Animation Show, the most extensive exhibition ever mounted to present a wide range of animated imagery produced in the last 120 years. Organized by the Barbican Centre, London, the exhibition juxtaposes works by pioneers and independent film-makers including Étienne-Jules Marey, Max Fleischer, and Lotte Reiniger with the creative output of commercial studios such as Disney, Studio Ghibli and Pixar. It also includes works by major contemporary artists such as William Kentridge and Nathalie Djurberg. As part of an acclaimed international tour, Watch Me Move will be on view in the Frist Center’s Ingram Gallery from June 6–September 1, 2014.

Presenting animation as a highly influential force in the development of global visual culture, Watch Me Move explores the relationship between animation and film and offers a timely insight into the genre as a cultural phenomenon. “While we often think of animation as an art form for children, this exhibition acknowledges its appeal to all generations and cultures from the United States and Europe to Japan and China,” says Frist Center Chief Curator Mark Scala. “Most of the works comprise family entertainment, which is often hilarious and ingenious. Even films with purely aesthetic aims, or with mature and socially critical content, will change the way people appreciate many of the most creative, yet often unheralded, masters of the medium.”

The show features 85 works, from iconic clips to lesser-known masterpieces. Mr. Scala describes the potential experience: “As visitors move through galleries illuminated with the glow of screens and projections, we foresee them experiencing delight in the familiar mingled with pleasure at the imaginative productions of artists and filmmakers who have never achieved a wide audience. From wonder and laughter to provocation and contemplation, even a little shock, Watch Me Move inspires a surprising range of emotions.”

As part of the exhibition programming, the Frist Center has partnered with Nashville’s independent nonprofit Belcourt Theatre to present an animation series scheduled for the first three weekends of July. A selection of family-friendly animated classics will be shown on Saturday mornings at 10 a.m. The Belcourt will also screen a midnight movie series with features such as Who Framed Roger Rabbit, Ralph Bakshi’s Heavy Traffic and the manga Ghost in the Shell for mature audiences.

Transforming the gallery into an immersive environment, the exhibition is divided into six thematic groupings: Apparitions, Fables and Fragments, Structures, Characters, Superhumans and Modern Visions. The first section, Apparitions, focuses on the emergence of the animated image with its roots in photographer Eadweard Muybridge’s now iconic split-second frame images of animals and humans in motion. Max Fleischer, considered the father of modern character animation for his pioneering techniques and sense of humor, is represented by his Out of the Inkwell (1918–29) series characters Betty Boop and Koko the Clown.

The technical and artistic qualities of animation, in all its forms, have made it the ideal medium to interpret myths, fables, and fairy tales. Fables and Fragments demonstrates how animators including Walt Disney and Peter Jackson have tapped a deep collective well in bringing powerful archetypal stories from around the world to generations of viewers. Chinese animators including Wan Gu Chan and Wan Lai Ming and the Japanese Studio Ghibli have also turned to their respective culture’s story traditions for inspiration. Also included in this section are provocative works intended for mature audiences by contemporary artists such as Nathalie Djurberg and Jan Švankmajer who use traditional means and materials to evoke primal collective memories.

While much animation is aimed at storytelling, the section Structures focuses on avant-garde artists who have long delighted in manipulating film’s most basic properties—form, color, sound, movement and duration—to create dynamic aesthetic experiences. Today, digitalization provides an expanded toolkit, as seen in the collaborative group Semiconductor’s Matter in Motion, which comprises a series of fanciful structural interventions, dissolving and reforming within the urban landscape, as if to emphasize its transience. Structures includes the film A Colour Box, (1935), a riot of light and motion whereby Len Lye painted geometric patterns directly onto celluloid, to a soundtrack of Cuban music.

The clips in Characters feature some of the biggest stars of animation. The 1930s saw a shift to standardized formats built around characters such as Mickey Mouse, Betty Boop, and Felix the Cat. The focus on individual personality continued with the rise of TV cartoons, in which Fred and Wilma Flintstone, George Jetson, and Yogi Bear reflected the mores of the 1960s. More recently, characters like the Simpsons and the cast of South Park have been vehicles for social satire. John Lasseter’s first film for Pixar Animation Studios, Luxo Jr., (1986), follows the antics of a small desk lamp, as its elder lamp affectionately looks on. A sustained development of personality appears in such animations as Pixar’s Toy Story trilogy (1995/1999/2010), in which Woody and his cohort are shown as complex and compelling virtual beings. This section also includes less well-known characters, showing the power of animation to convey social and political issues. For example Tim Webb’s award-winning film, A is for Autism, (1992), combines words, drawings, music and animation by people with autism.

Characters with extraordinary powers are a staple of post-World War II animation. The protagonists of Superhumans tend to be ordinary humans, who have been possessed or traumatized beyond the realm of normal experience such as the Hulk, an ordinary young man whose body is chemically altered, giving him remarkable strengths coupled with a profound sense of alienation. Other highlights include, Astro Boy, 1963–66, set in a futuristic city in 2030, featuring the amazing adventures of a child robot with superpowers. While culturally specific, as in Japanese manga and anime or America’s Marvel comics, the appeal of superhumans is international in scope. Also on view is an extended clip from Disney’s groundbreaking film Tron, (1982), inspired by the emerging gaming industries that developed out of the first commercially viable video game, Computer Space, in 1971.

The exhibition concludes with Modern Visions, which includes works by contemporary artists who address adult themes of war, sexuality and various aspects of cultural dissonance. RMB City (2009) depicts the online world of Second Life, conceived by Beijing artist Cao Fei (aka China Tracy) as a place for participants to create a parallel reality in which to live out their dreams. Other highlights of this section include Ryan Trecartin’s manic Tommy Chat Just E-Mailed Me, and additional works created for a more mature audience. Such works demonstrate the blurred lines between life and art engendered by today’s technology, while reminding viewers that animation is not just for children.

“Through its history, animation has excited the imaginations of young and old in every culture. It is a form of art that entertains and inspires, drawing forth visions from the dream-life of culture,” says Mr. Scala. “In animation, anything is possible.”

Watch Me Move: The Animation Show is organized by Barbican Centre, London and was curated by Greg Hilty and Barbican Art Gallery.

Exhibition Credit

Watch Me Move: The Animation Show is organized by Barbican Centre, London.
The Barbican Centre is provided by the City of London Corporation.

Sponsor Acknowledgment

Platinum Sponsor: The HCA Foundation on behalf of HCA and TriStar Health

The Frist Center for the Visual Arts is supported in part by the Metro Nashville Arts Commission, the Tennessee Arts Commission and the National Endowment for the Arts.

Exhibition Catalogue

The exhibition is accompanied by a fully illustrated book, edited by Greg Hilty and Alona Pardo, with texts by Suzanne Buchan, Greg Hilty and Paul Wells. Published by Merrell in association with Barbican Art Gallery.

Related Public Programs

Monday–Friday, June 9–13
10:00 a.m.–4:00 p.m.
NEW: Teen Workshop ARTlab: Moving Pictures

Frist Center Studios
$300 per teen for members/$350 per teen for non-members
Advance registration required; visit http://www.fristcenter.org/summerartcamp”>http://http://www.fristcenter.org/summerartcamp to register

Drawing inspiration from Watch Me Move: The Animation Show, young artists will immerse themselves in a fantastical world of creative possibilities. Participants will investigate how animation has been used to shape and reflect our culture and will create unique characters to express their inner narrative. Construct exciting projects using a variety of techniques and materials including storyboarding, in-depth character design, iPad applications, mixed media experiments and stop-motion animation.

Monday–Friday, June 16–20
9:00 am–4:00 p.m.
Summer Camp: “Animation 101” Ages 11–13

Frist Center Studios
$300 per session/ $250 per session for members
Advance registration required; register online at http://www.fristcenter.org/summerartcamp”>http://http://www.fristcenter.org/summerartcamp to reserve a spot. Space is limited!

Be inspired by the history of animation! Building on the exhibition Watch Me Move: The Animation Show, campers will generate artworks that explore visual phenomena and the illusion of perceived motion. Participants will test a variety of media dedicated to the moving image, including iPad applications, Claymation, flipbooks and stop-action animation. Use materials ranging from charcoal, cut paper, found objects, and more to design your moving masterpieces!

Monday–Friday, June 23–27 and July 14–18
1:00–4:00 p.m.
Summer Camp: “Make it Move!” Ages 8–10

Frist Center Studios
$200 per session/ $150 per session for members
Advance registration required; register online at http://www.fristcenter.org/summerartcamp”>http://http://www.fristcenter.org/summerartcamp to reserve a spot. Space is limited!

Experiment with moving art. Inspired by the exhibition Watch Me Move: The Animation Show, young artists will learn the basics of animation and experiment with different types of sequential art, including comic books, stop-motion animation, Claymation, and more.

Monday–Friday, June 23–27 and July 14–18
1:00–4:00 p.m.
Summer Camp: “Stories Come Alive” Ages 5–7

Frist Center Studios
$200 per session/ $150 per session for members
Advance registration required; register online at http://www.fristcenter.org/summerartcamp”>http://http://www.fristcenter.org/summerartcamp to reserve a spot. Space is limited!

Make art and bring your ideas to life. Inspired by the exhibition Watch Me Move: The Animation Show, campers will use drawing, clay sculpting, and mixed media materials to craft unique characters and invent stories. Campers will explore a variety of storytelling methods, including using teamwork to create a Claymation movie.

Friday, June 13
6:30 p.m.
Lecture: “Unlimited Visions, Indelible Dreams: Exploring the Animated Worlds of Watch Me Move: The Animation Show” Presented by Elliot Wilhelm, curator of film, Detroit Institute of Arts

Frist Center Auditorium
Gallery admission required; members free
Seating is first come, first seated

Hindered only by the imagination of its creator, animation allows filmmakers and artists to create worlds onscreen where inanimate objects take on a life of their own, animals find their voice, and figures of myth and fairy tale take form. Join curator and film historian Elliot Wilhelm for a closer look at the animated films featured in the exhibition Watch Me Move: The Animation Show and an exploration of the powerful relationships that unite animation, cinema, and the viewer.

Sunday, June 15
2:00–3:00 p.m.
Artful Tales: “The Frog Who Wanted to Sing”

Frist Center Auditorium/Studios
Free; seating is first come, first seated

Artful Tales is a FREE family program geared toward everyone ages three and up! Listen and play along as an art-related story comes to life. Then, head upstairs to the art studio and make an artwork that relates to the story.

Join us for a story about an African bullfrog who uses music and rhythm to find his heart’s desire. Afterwards, work with family members to create a flip book that “animates” your favorite story. This program connects visitors to the exhibition Watch Me Move: The Animation Show.

Friday, June 20
7:00 p.m.
ARTini: Watch Me Move: The Animation Show Presented by Ginny Soenksen

Gallery admission required; members free assistant curator of interpretation, Frist Center
Meet at exhibition entrance

Are you curious about art? Do you want to learn more about the content and concepts behind an artist’s work? If you answered yes to either of those questions, then the ARTini program is for you! ARTinis are designed for everyone—from the novice to the connoisseur—and include informal and insightful conversations that offer a deeper understanding of one or two works of art in an exhibition.

Join Frist Center Assistant Curator of Interpretation Ginny Soenksen as she discusses the development of Japanese anime films from early cutout animation to the masterpieces of Miyazaki.

*This program repeats on Tuesday, June 24 at 12:00 p.m.

Watch Me Move at Belcourt Theatre

This July, the Frist Center for the Visual Arts and Belcourt Theatre are teaming up to bring the Frist Center’s exhibition Watch Me Move: The Animation Show to Belcourt Theatre’s big screen with two film series. Watch Me Move Kids’ Shows will feature family friendly animation classics. Watch Me Move Midnight Movies will feature animation cult classics, edgy animated shorts and movie themed cocktails. Learn more about the featured films and reciprocal discounts for members of both organizations at http://www.fristcenter.org and at http://www.belcourt.org.

Friday, July 4 and Saturday, July 5
11:59 p.m.
Watch Me Move Midnight Movies at Belcourt Theatre: Ghost in the Shell

Belcourt Theatre
$6.25 for members/$9.25 for non-members*

Ghost in the Shell features a female cyborg cop and her partner hunt a powerful hacker called the Puppet Master in this anime thriller. Directed by Mamoru Oshii. Stars Atsuko Tanaka, Iemasa Kayumi, and Akio Ôtsuka. Japanese with English subtitles. 1995. Rated R. 83 minutes. This film contains violence, profanity and sexual content.

*Frist Center members may purchase admission to the Watch Me Move film series screenings at Belcourt Theatre according to Belcourt Theatre’s member pricing structure.

Saturday, July 5
10:00 a.m.
Watch Me Move Kids’ Shows at Belcourt Theatre: Spirited Away

Belcourt Theatre
*$4 for members/ $5 for non-members

A ten year-old girl must save her family from the clutches of an evil witch and her enchanted amusement park in Studio Ghibli’s Spirited Away. Pixar Studio’s John Lasseter worked with Hayao Miyazaki to produce this English translation of Miyazaki’s anime masterpiece. Written and directed by Hayao Miyazaki. Stars Daveigh Chase, Suzanne Pleshette, and Miyu Irino. 2011. Rated PG. 125 minutes. DCP. Dubbed in English.

*Frist Center members may purchase admission to the Watch Me Move film series screenings at Belcourt Theatre according to Belcourt Theatre’s member pricing structure.

Friday, July 11 and Saturday, July 12
11:59 p.m.
Watch Me Move Midnight Movies at Belcourt Theatre: Who Framed Roger Rabbit

Belcourt Theatre
*$6.25 for members/$9.25 for non-members

Curmudgeonly detective Eddie Valiant is the only thing that stands between a falsely accused cartoon rabbit and the wrath of Judge Doom and his toon-killing dip in this comic caper. Who Framed Roger Rabbit features cartoon antics and film noir archetypes collide through a dazzling combination of live action and cel animation in this comedy classic. Directed by Robert Zemeckis. Stars Bob Hoskins, Christopher Lloyd and Joanna Cassidy. 1988. Rated PG. 104 minutes. 35 mm.

*Frist Center members may purchase admission to the Watch Me Move film series screenings at Belcourt Theatre according to Belcourt Theatre’s member pricing structure.

Saturday, July 12
10:00 a.m.
Watch Me Move Kids’ Shows at Belcourt Theatre: Warner Bros. Looney Tunes

Belcourt Theatre
$4 for members/ $5 for non-members*

Here’s a mixed bag of classic Looney Tunes shorts screened on 35mm. Catch Bugs Bunny, Daffy Duck, Pepe Le Pew, and the whole gang for Saturday morning cartoons at the Belcourt. Approximate run time: Two hours.

*Frist Center members may purchase admission to the Watch Me Move film series screenings at Belcourt Theatre according to Belcourt Theatre’s member pricing structure.

Friday, July 18 and Saturday, July 19
11:59 p.m.
Watch Me Move Midnight Movies at Belcourt Theatre: Heavy Traffic

Belcourt Theatre
$6.25 for members/$9.25 for non-members*

In Heavy Traffic, an underground cartoonist contends with life in the inner city, where various unsavory characters serve as inspiration for his artwork. Animator Ralph Bakshi’s provocative films proved that adult content and animation could coexist. Written and directed by Ralph Bakshi. Stars Joseph Kaufmann, Beverly Hope Atkinson, Frank DeKova. 1973. Rated X. 76 minutes. 35 mm. This film contains violence, profanity, sexual content and substance abuse.

*Frist Center members may purchase admission to the Watch Me Move film series screenings at Belcourt Theatre according to Belcourt Theatre’s member pricing structure.

Saturday, July 19
10:00 a.m.
Watch Me Move Kids’ Shows at Belcourt Theatre: Saturday Morning Cartoons!

Belcourt Theatre
*$4 for members/ $5 for non-members

Continuing the precedent set by last week’s Looney Tunes screening, we’ll pay tribute to a seemingly lost phenomenon that today’s parents will recognize: leisurely Saturday mornings spent flipping channels between short segments from the likes of Hanna-Barbera, Max Fleischer, Jay Ward and many more. What’s showing? It’s a surprise. Approximate run time: 100 minutes. 16 mm.

*Frist Center members may purchase admission to the Watch Me Move film series screenings at Belcourt Theatre according to Belcourt Theatre’s member pricing structure.

Thursday, July 17
5:00–8:00 p.m.
Workshop: “Drop-in Drawing”
with Tom Bancroft, animator and author
Frist Center’s Ingram Gallery
Gallery admission required; members free

Join former Disney animator and author Tom Bancroft for this special workshop for participants age 18 dedicated to enhancing drawing drawing techniques. Visitors may check out drawing materials and find inspiration in the artworks in the galleries or in the architecture of the building. Tom Bancroft will be drawing and will be available to answer particpant questions. An art educator will be stationed near the Information Desk on the first level to distribute supplies and to give instructional guidance as needed.

Thursday, July 24
6:30 p.m.
Artists’ Forum: Mark Hosford and Barry Jones

Frist Center’s Rechter Room
Free; Seating is first come, first seated

Artists’ Forum is a program in which artists discuss the thoughts and processes behind their work. Participants are encouraged to come and be a part of the dialogue about the artistic process. In conjunction with the Frist Center exhibition Watch Me Move: The Animation Show, Nashville artists who use animation as their medium or are inspired by the visual language of animated film have been selected for two summer Artists’ Forums; the second is scheduled for Thursday, August 14.

Mark Hosford specializes in drawing, printmaking, and animation. Hosford’s work draws from a fascination with ghost stories, oddities, stream of consciousness, and personal narratives. Barry Jones is a digital video and sound artist. Jones has far ranging interests in music, the history of film, new technologies, and social activism.

Saturday, August 2
1:00–5:00 p.m.
Family Workshop: Studio Animate

Frist Center’s Studio A and B
$30 members/$40 non-members: registration fee includes gallery admission and workshop materials for two adults and two children; register additional participants for $3.00 each.
Advance registration required; call 615.744.3355 by Wednesday, July 30. Space is limited!

Explore the history of animation in this collaborative workshop led by teaching artist Meredith Eastburn. Work with family members to create animated artworks using digital programs and drawing techniques.

Thursday, August 7
12:00 p.m.
Curator’s Tour: Watch Me Move: The Animation Show Presented by Mark Scala, Frist Center chief curator
and Tom Bancroft, animator and author
Meet at exhibition entrance
Gallery admission required; members free

From the early film experiments of Étienne-Jules Marey and the Lumière brothers to twenty-first century computer based animation by Pixar Animation Studios, the exhibition Watch Me Move explores how filmmakers have used animation to bring the fantastic to life on the screen. For this tour, Frist Center Chief Curator Mark Scala and animator and author Tom Bancroft, who has more than 25 years of experience in the animation industry, will guide visitors through the animated worlds of Watch Me Move.

Thursday, August 14
6:30 p.m.
Artists’ Forum with Jonathan Rattner and Michael Lapinski

Frist Center Rechter Room
Free; Seating is first come, first seated

Artists’ Forum is a program in which artists discuss the thoughts and processes behind their work. Participants are encouraged to come and be part of the dialogue about the artistic process. In conjunction with the Frist Center exhibition Watch Me Move, Nashville artists who use animation as their medium or are inspired by the visual language of animated film have been selected for two summer Artists’ Forums.

Jonathan Rattner is a lens-based artist that primarily produces experimental nonfiction films and videos. He is currently assistant director of Film Studies and assistant professor of Art at Vanderbilt University. Michael Lapinski is an animation designer and art director as well as a comic book artist and creator.

Thursday, August 21
5:00–8:00 p.m.
Workshop: “Drop-in Drawing”

Frist Center’s Ingram Gallery
Gallery admission required; members free

Practice different techniques and enhance your drawing skills during this workshop for participants age 18 and older. Visitors may check out drawing materials and find inspiration in the artworks in the galleries or in the architecture of the building. An art educator will be stationed near the Information Desk on the first level to distribute supplies and to give instructional guidance as needed.

Friday, August 22
6:00–7:30 p.m.
The Art of Beer

Frist Center Auditorium
$15 members/$20 non-members
Advance registration required; call 615.744.3355 before Friday, August 15.

The medium of animation allows filmmakers to put their characters in a limitless range of scenarios. Scenes of immoderate consumption of everything from alcohol to laughing gas to honey may trigger a character’s hallucinatory sequence or their outrageous antics. Whether they are intended to teach a lesson or are simply an excuse for dazzling visual effects, inebriated cartoons appear throughout the history of animation.

Come learn more about classic cartoons and altered states, then listen to representatives from three local breweries—Turtle Anarchy, Jackalope and Yazoo—talk about their own artistic process in the creation of their beers. Participants must be at least 21 years old with a valid ID to attend.

Sponsored by: Turtle Anarchy Brewing Co.; Jackalope Brewing Co.; and Yazoo Brewing Co.

CONTACT
Buddy Kite: 615-744-3351, ”
Ellen Jones Pryor: 615-243-1311, ”

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About the Frist Center
Accredited by the American Alliance of Museums, the Frist Center for the Visual Arts is a 501(c)3 nonprofit art exhibition center dedicated to presenting and originating high quality exhibitions with related educational programs and community outreach activities. The Frist Center offers the finest visual art from local, regional, national, and international sources in a program of changing exhibitions that inspire people through art to look at their world in new ways. Located at 919 Broadway in downtown Nashville, Tenn., the Frist Center’s Martin ArtQuest Gallery (open until 5:30 p.m. each day) features interactive stations relating to Frist Center exhibitions. Information on accessibility at the Frist Center is found at http://www.fristcenter.org/accessibility. Gallery admission to the Frist Center is free for visitors 18 and younger and to members. Frist Center admission is $10.00 for adults and $7.00 for seniors, military and college students with ID. College students are admitted free Thursday and Friday evenings (with the exception of Frist Fridays), 5–9 p.m. Discounts are offered for groups of 10 or more with advance reservation by calling (615) 744-3247. The Frist Center galleries, Café and Gift Shop are open seven days a week: Mondays through Wednesdays, and Saturdays, 10 a.m.–5:30 p.m.; Thursdays and Fridays, 10 a.m.–9 p.m. and Sundays, 1–5:30 p.m., with the Frist Center Café opening at noon. Additional information is available by calling (615) 244-3340 or by visiting our website at http://www.fristcenter.org.

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